Friday, 9 November 2018

THOUSAND OAKS - FALSE FLAG

On 7 November 2018, a mass shooting took place in Thousand Oaks, California, United States, at the Borderline Bar and Grill, a country-western bar frequented by college students.[4][5][6]

Twelve people were killed, including a police officer. One other person was shot, while twenty-four were injured.

The attacker was also found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound inside the bar and was identified as 28-year-old Ian David Long,[7] a United States Marine Corps veteran.[8][9][10]

A man interviewed by the local ABC station said that multiple friends inside Borderline had survived the Route 91 country music festival shooting at the Mandalay Bay casino in Las Vegas just over a year ago.

"I was at the Las Vegas Route 91 mass shooting": Man inside Southern California bar when a gunman opened fire was with "probably 50 or 60 others" who were also at the Las Vegas massacre last year. https://cbsn.ws/2Qt1jXm

In U.S. mass shootings, military veterans are over twice as likely to be mass shooters ... about 14.76 percent of U.S. men are veterans, but at least 35% of these shooters were veterans

Society [is] taught by schools and entertainment systems that mass-killing is the way to solve problems

Mass killing in the United States gets you on the news, and if you happen to be a president bombing a distant land it gets you widely praised and labeled as “finally presidential”

If over 35% of U.S. mass shooters were Muslim or foreign or black or gay or socialist or red-haired or any of millions of other things likely actually coincidental, it would be a Big Freaking Deal

But the fact that over 35% of them have been trained by the world’s biggest mass-killing institution is simply not of any interest

In the United States, hundreds of deadly shootings every year are committed by police officers - disproportionately military veterans

Suicides, as well, are disproportionately committed by veterans. Veteran suicides are driven by guilt over having participated in killing. That guilt is the top factor in predicting suicide, according to the U.S. Veterans Administration. »